Find out how you can travel consciously

Isn’t it amazing how affordable and accessible travel is these days? Whether you’re going to the country for a weekend or halfway around the world for six months, you can book an entire trip within minutes on your smartphone — or have someone else arrange it for you completely. To add to this, options abound when it comes to accommodation, tours and other experiences — and you’re paying a fraction of the price you would have a few years ago.

All of this frequent exploring and travelling presents us with a unique opportunity that we can harness to see the world in a new way and create a more meaningful impact. This is conscious travel.

The yogic traveller

Conscious travel goes beyond the typical holiday and is about creating a positive impact while you explore the world.With its focus is on adopting a mindful and responsible outlook — it could almost be called “yogic travelling” — this doesn’t necessarily mean your experience needs to involve a wellness or spirituality retreat.

Conscious travel requires us to become more aware in our travel choices and how they might impact the local community, culture and environment, while drinking up and savouring every moment of the experience. Embracing this yogic perspective and even making the smallest conscious travel decisions can make a big impact. From offsetting your carbon emissions to giving your time to volunteer or choosing a local tour guide, there are plenty of ways you can travel consciously on social, environmental and spiritual levels.

Seeing the world in a new way

The concept of karma is helpful to understand why it is important to travel consciously and experience the world in different ways.

Conscious travel goes beyond the typical holiday and is about creating a positive impact while you explore the world. All our actions have a karmic effect and it is the selfish, negative acts that overshadow us and cause suffering. As a way of avoiding creating new karma, karma yoga teaches the practice of positive and selfless actions. The mindset and intention behind this is essential and requires you to act selflessly without first considering, “But what will I get out of it?”

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You can in some small ways practise karma yoga by transforming your intention when it comes to travel. For instance, instead of placing what you hope to get out of your travels as a top priority, rethink your intention. Prioritise, say, helping the local community through sustainable tourism or respecting the environment through adopting a “leave no trace” ethos.

With a refreshed mindset, travel becomes less about self-indulgent, extravagant holidays and more about experiencing the world in a meaningful way, interacting with difference cultures, giving back and doing good. How yogic is that? And the Beauty is that there are so many ways to do this, which suit all kinds of travellers and won’t cost the earth.

On- and off-the-mat travel tips

To experience richer travels, try the following:

Think locally

Travel planning is a key part of being a conscious traveller. Doing your homework before you go ensures you have the knowledge to truly make responsible and ethical choices.

One part of travelling consciously is thinking locally — and you won’t regret it. Generally speaking, local options provide a more genuine, authentic experience and also offer an opportunity for you to make more of a direct impact and boost the local economy.

To ensure your experience does less harm and more good, consider the following during travel planning and when on the ground:

Don’t just see the world — change the world

If you want to go a step further, volunteering trips are a great way to experience a new culture while making a tangible difference. Overseas volunteering takes you off the tourist track and allows you to make connections with a community, so you can understand the challenges they face on a deeper level.

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The growth and popularity of “voluntourism” experiences has sadly resulted in unethical providers cashing in on their popularity. In these cases, money given by visitors often doesn’t funnel to those actually in need, and children can be exploited and placed at risk of abuse.

Having said this, there are plenty of volunteer experiences that work in partnership with communities to achieve long-term, sustainable integrated development. Research organisations thoroughly before you sign up, including their development approach, cost breakdown and allocation, child protection and privacy policies and what support they will provide you on the ground.

Some ethical options include:

Different ways to support a cause

Prefer to get behind a cause while seeing the world? There are other ways than, say, being a doctor who cures cancer. People are increasingly looking for finding impactful ways to incorporate travel and altruism through charity-based challenges and activities. These experiences provide supporters with a platform to take action by, for example, cycling through Vietnam, climbing Mount Kilimanjaro or trekking through Tassie in the name of fighting cancer, raising awareness for endangered species or the rights of women and girls around the world.

These activities and adventures have a donation component, which participants fundraise among their networks before leaving on the trip in support of the cause. Such fundraising and awareness-raising activities engage and mobilise supporters who might not have the ability to participate themselves, and allow them to be part of your journey and make a difference without leaving Home.

Do you want to support a cause and challenge yourself while experiencing new places and cultures? Try:

Meditation and yoga retreats

For those who cannot go without their asana practice and want a truly conscious and spiritual experience, you can’t look beyond a meditation or yoga retreat.

However, remember that a conscious and spiritually rewarding trip doesn’t mean you have to stay in an ashram the whole time. You can also look for experiences that allow you to explore the local environment and take part in cultural activities, such as an eco-friendly retreat.

Many eco-retreats offer a wonderful blend of yoga and other natural therapies and activities, which immerse you in the natural environment and culture and don’t leave behind a nasty carbon footprint. To ensure your retreat is entirely eco-friendly, research the facility and how its operators actually contribute to or conserve the local environment or community.

In Australia, we have some stunning eco-retreats at our front door, as well as other great options further afield.

At home

Abroad

How to reduce your carbon footprint

Most modes of travel have an impact on the environment, but you can take steps to reduce your footprint by becoming aware of your impact and options.

A staycation with a difference

If your bank balance is looking a bit low, a staycation is a great option for the conscious and budget-conscious traveller. Here’s how —and why — you should experience your city in a new way:

Festivals that give back

Find inspiration, discover new ideas and see the world in a new way by tagging a mindful festival onto your next trip! Here are our top finds:

A conscious experience

Mahatma Gandhi once said, “In a gentle way, you can shake the world,” and, through travelling, you really can. By repositioning your mindset from being all about yourself and the break you so badly deserve to how you can impact others and become more mindful, it’s possible to transform travel into a more conscious experience on social, ethical, environmental and spiritual levels. Go forth and shake!

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